Neiman Marcus has settled a suit brought by a high-end shopper
who tried to return $1.4 million in goods her husband bought from
a saleswoman who was allegedly his mistress,
The Dallas Morning News reports.

Walker says her now-ex husband, Robert Tennison bought the
merchandise while she recovered from a car accident and he slept
with a Neiman Marcus sales associate. Neiman said it wasn't
obligated to take back the goods, calling her suit "nothing more
than the ventings of a woman scorned."

Walker's attorney Mark Ticer has said the case isn't about
revenge, though.

"This is about accountability and getting them to step up and do
the right thing," Ticer told the
Associated Press in May.

During a 2012 hearing, Neiman's attorney told the judge
overseeing the case that the store had no written return policy —
a claim the judge called "incredible."

That claim prompted Ticer to present a printout from Neiman's
website reading, "You may return for credit, at any time,
merchandise with which you are not completely satisfied."

The lawsuit also named the saleswoman with whom Tennison
allegedly had an affair. She earned a large commission from the
sales, Walker's lawyer told
ABC News.